“Vulnerability is the core of fear, but also the birthplace of love and belonging.” Brene Brown
It is human nature to want to experience a strong sense of love and belonging in your life. What Brene Brown found in her groundbreaking studies on shame and vulnerability is that there is ONE thing that separates those who feel shame and struggle for this sense of true connection, and those who are able to experience love and belonging in their lives:
So many of us run a false story (often just below the surface of awareness) that we are not worthy, and live in fear of being rejected, abandoned, hurt, unloved, or discovered a fraud. This is all based on “stuff” we experienced as children that felt so terrifying that we think by staying on guard we will protect ourselves from what can sometimes feel like virtual annihilation. We avoid vulnerability, we don’t talk about it, and then we hide behind our shame by numbing ourselves out or pushing it below our conscious awareness.
We’ve talked about this in past posts, but the short explanation is that it is not based on reality but on being exposed to words or experiences at a crucial point in our childhood. We then translated those experiences into feeling not good enough. We feel abandoned, confused about our instincts or unlovable. Some examples of these childhood experiences would be feeling pressured to get all A’s (so you become a perfectionist) or parents telling you that you’ll never make money at art (so you abandon your dream), or, having a parent leave,either literally or emotionally, (so you grow up feeling unlovable).
There’s also a fair amount of shame wrapped around each of these experiences and the truth is that unless we name that shame, we will never let it go – and it will continue to be the covert director of our lives. The shame will stop us from taking any risk that we think threatens exposure of our shame. Risks in relationships, in pursuing our real dreams or in allowing ourselves to be vulnerable.
So what do you do? Start by allowing yourself to be vulnerable enough to get hurt – and know you will not only survive, but will be relieved and then thrive. Being hurt does not kill us, but we think it will. Remember, we always have a choice about how we feel– as long as we are conscious. Yes, you’ll be hurt. But what you do with that hurt is up to you.
Look at where the shame lives. Identify the shame. It’s not always obvious, but shame can exist in secret hiding places like: “I’m unattractive and therefore unlovable,” or “I made such stupid mistakes when I was younger that if anyone finds out, they’ll think I’m horrible.”
Ignoring the fact that we do feel vulnerable causes us to be even more afraid. Our fear causes us to numb out and not face our fears. Brown’s work is important because she makes it okay to be imperfect and vulnerable. By realizing we are imperfect and vulnerable, we realize we are all born worthy of love and connection.
Shame and vulnerability are universal! Everyone feels these things on different levels. When they are not talked about or acknowledged, they damage us by making us feel unworthy.
Here are some ways to work with this awareness:
Brown says to feel vulnerable means you’re alive. Embrace that.
[VP1]I went for parallel construction here so all the (so this is what the result was) were in parentheses and started with “so.”